I have a GG SpinnTwinn and have been setting it up with my trekking poles placed directly in the grommets, which is how they do it in the video on the GG website. However, I've noticed in a lot of pictures that tarps like this are often set up with the guyline wrapped around the trekking pole, which is a few inches away from the tarp itself. Is there a reason why you would do it one way instead of the other? Maybe first way if you have adjustable trekking poles and second way if they are fixed length?

I much prefer wrapping ridge lines around the trekking poles for a few reasons:

- My GG LT4s have optional baskets. I leave them at home to save weight in the summer. If I slip the webbing of my shelter over the pointy end of the pole, there is nothing to hold it there, it just slips down. (grommet may be small enough to catch just on the tip.)

- Putting my trekking poles upright keeps them cleaner. I also read about an animal gnawing the foam off an inverted trekking pole. I'd rather that not happen.

- More space around tarp opening like Steve said.

- I actually think it is more stable than upside down in that in decently firm ground I can stick my pole into the ground nice and firmly.

I also place my poles a few inches away as I feel it gives a tighter pitch. However I will say I use a clove hitch rather than a simple wrap around the handle. I feel it holds the handle better as well as allows me to move the pole within the line with relative ease.

Adjustable trekking poles like the TiGoats and GG LT4s can get water in them if left overnight in a rain storm inverted. Water get in between the upper and lower section and eventually rusts the metal bits inside. (The GG poles have O-Ring to help prevent this.)

Another advantage to the pole being set a little bit away from the tarp is that you can pitch the tarp lower. When I want to pitch the tarp lower than my trekking pole will collapse, I can stake the sides low, then run the ridge line (almost always in back) up to near the handle of the collapsed pole. I tie the clove hitch just above a piece of duct tale I store there on the pole.

I've never had a pole roll away from my tarp in a few years now. The pole is driven into the ground. If it wants to roll away it needs two things IMO: 1) twisting on the pole, not sure how wind would do that and 2) the pole driven into the ground has to move closer or farther from the tarp. I actually adjust my pole once in awhile when the pitch doesn't go quite right by picking the pole up off the ground where it is planted and twisting it nearer or farther away from the tarp. I haven't been in weather conditions where wind could do both of those actions.